LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,755
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
"How's tricks?" as a general inquiry into the current state of affairs. I use this all the time and the kids always look at me with puzzlement.
I hate to be a buzz kill, but this is the "Terms Which Have Disappeared" thread, not "The Great Gatsby" thread.
The term " Copper" disappeared.. " Thread Copper "
"The coppers!" (Meaning police)
Hi Hatguy1
Indeed, I am well aware of the term. I was simply joking that our fellow lounger" Kilo Novermber" was being a Thread cop aka copper...
My post was in jest and no disrespect was implied..
Best regards
CCJ
"Paper route," "copyboy," the exciting shout of "Extra! Extra! Read all about it..." from "newsboys" at the corners.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
There are still quite a few in the Hollywood area, mostly on side streets adjacent to Hollywood Blvd., but they're really more "magazine" stands than news stands these days. There may be some in downtown Los Angeles, but I'm not in that area often enough to make that determination. Sadly, it seems even book stores (or any other print media outlets) are also on the decline.Aside from newsboys on street corners , can anyone remembr "news stands " .
In Providence on just about every other street corner was a news stand .
Most were plywood built say perhaps six feet tall byeight or so feet wide and only a few feet deep.
There would be a guy sitting on a stool with the doors of the stand open and it would be chock full of all kinds of papers mags etc etc anything in print.
Those are long gone and it looks like newspapers are also on the way out .
A very good friend of mine only recently (within the last year) got his first cell phone, has no Internet access in his apartment, and doesn't have cable/satellite television. He's no Luddite (by the modern definition), but he sees little to no real advantage in the added expenditures and "hassles" associated with such technology. The cell phone was a necessity, as his mother has developed some health issues related to her age and needed access to him that pay phones can't provide, but otherwise he's perfectly happy doing without the things most people can't seem to live without these days. Prior to getting his cell phone he had remarked a number of times on the state of disrepair of most pay phones, and still occasionally expresses his discontent with the decline of daily newspapers (particularly regarding their ever-decreasing page count and all-too-brief articles that end with the phrase "For more information, go to www.whatever.com."), but otherwise says he doesn't miss television and couldn't care less about the 'Net. So, contrary to popular belief, a person can get by without a smartphone, gps, the Internet, e-mail, etc., but it's definitely becoming increasingly more difficult to do so.Now while talking about this and perhaps straying a bit off topic , it just dawned on me about how much "damage " just one little modern gadget like the "smartphone" has done and can do to outdate and obsolete so many other things like for instance ,the newspaper, the telephone booth, maps (gps) ,the camera ,the u.s.p.s. ( email).
I am sure there are a few others that I havent thought of , but I'm sure you get my drift.
There are still quite a few in the Hollywood area, mostly on side streets adjacent to Hollywood Blvd., but they're really more "magazine" stands than news stands these days. There may be some in downtown Los Angeles, but I'm not in that area often enough to make that determination. Sadly, it seems even book stores (or any other print media outlets) are also on the decline.
A very good friend of mine only recently (within the last year) got his first cell phone, has no Internet access in his apartment, and doesn't have cable/satellite television. He's no Luddite (by the modern definition), but he sees little to no real advantage in the added expenditures and "hassles" associated with such technology. The cell phone was a necessity, as his mother has developed some health issues related to her age and needed access to him that pay phones can't provide, but otherwise he's perfectly happy doing without the things most people can't seem to live without these days. Prior to getting his cell phone he had remarked a number of times on the state of disrepair of most pay phones, and still occasionally expresses his discontent with the decline of daily newspapers (particularly regarding their ever-decreasing page count and all-too-brief articles that end with the phrase "For more information, go to www.whatever.com."), but otherwise says he doesn't miss television and couldn't care less about the 'Net. So, contrary to popular belief, a person can get by without a smartphone, gps, the Internet, e-mail, etc., but it's definitely becoming increasingly more difficult to do so.
Truthfully, he isn't doing it out of some sort of "traditional" or "moral" high ground. It's primarily more of a financial concern and, for the time being, the Internet and television are luxuries rather than necessities for him--luxuries he can't really afford easily. And he does realize his days are numbered--it's more a matter of "when" than of "if". But for now, he makes do with what he has.To each his own and if he's happy and it works for him that's great...I appreciate what your friend is doing, but I think he is going to be pulled perforce on line.